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      Wilhelm STENHAMMAR (1871-1927)    
String Quartet no.4 in A minor, op.25 (1904-09) [33:15]  
Lodolezzi Sjunger (Lodolezzi Sings), op.39 (1919) [7:27]  
String Quartet no.3 in F, op.18 (1897-1900) [32:13]  
Stenhammar Quartet  
rec. Petrus Kyrkan, Stocksund, Sweden, June 2012; April and October 2011 (no.4).  
        BIS BIS-SACD-1659  [73:47]  
         
 
String Quartet no.3 in F, op.18 (1897-1900) [32:53]  
String Quartet no.4 in A minor, op.25 (1904-09) [35:30]  
String Quartet no.5 in C, op.18 (1897-1900) [20:04]  
String Quartet no.6 in D minor, op.25 (1904-09) [25:18]  
Oslo Quartet  
rec. Jar Kirke, Oslo, 1-4 March 2006 (5 and 6); 8-10 March 2007 (3 and 4).   
        CPO 777426-2   
        [68:23 + 45:22]  
         
          Wilhelm Stenhammar lived a relatively short life, but still managed 
            to write seven string quartets. These two recent releases see a Swedish 
            and a Norwegian quartet in direct competition with each other for 
            cycle benchmark status. The only other to consider is the sequence 
            of 1980s AAD recordings available on the Caprice label, still to be 
            had on the internet (CAP 21337, 21338, 21339). This set consisted 
            of three different quartets - the Fresk, Copenhagen and Gotland - 
            who recorded two works each. Rather randomly, Caprice re-spliced these 
            so that each CD featured two ensembles - with noticeably different 
            engineering creating a rather needless jar.  
               
            Stenhammar has this to say about his quartets, reproduced in the CPO 
            notes: "…in these Arnold Schönberg times I dream of art 
            far away from Arnold Schönberg, clear, joyful, and naive". They 
            are certainly conservative in their conception, both structurally 
            and harmonically backward-looking. Stenhammar saw himself as following 
            in the Beethovenian tradition with these works, and this is especially 
            obvious in the Sixth, which is sullen, reflective, chromatic on the 
            one hand - a tribute to Stenhammar's late friend Tor Aulin - but elegantly 
            Haydnesque in parts on the other. Echoes of pure Haydn are most prominent 
            in the upbeat Fifth, aptly subtitled 'Serenade', whilst the Third 
            has elements that recall Brahms, even if it is Beethoven whose shadow 
            again looms large in the closing stages. Masterfully interwoven folk 
            elements are everywhere too, especially in the Third and the Fourth, 
            either among the finest quartets ever to have come out of Sweden. 
            In spite of Stenhammar's own modest aims, there is nothing naive about 
            any of these exquisitely crafted, highly distinctive and memorable 
            works.  
               
            There are six quartets by traditional numbering, but a seventh, in 
            F minor dating from 1897 and withdrawn by the composer after its first 
            performance, appears on volume 2 of the Stenhammar Quartet's survey, 
            due for release at the time of writing (October 2013). The quartets 
            from the Third onwards are generally considered Stenhammar's mature 
            works - perhaps that is why the Oslo Quartet's recording begins there. 
            The Stenhammar’s volume is definitely the first of three, and 
            with the inclusion of the F minor will almost certainly be the first 
            truly complete cycle - and, it must be said, the most authoritative. 
             
               
            BIS also have the better sound, though both Hybrid SACDs knock 
            the Caprice recordings into a cocked hat. On the other hand, potential 
            investors into either edition should be aware of both sets of musicians' 
            breathing habits. Naturally, every performer has the inalienable right 
            to respire whilst playing, yet there have to be limits. The Stenhammar 
            first violinist is unaware of any, it seems: like countless others 
            before him, alas, he leaves almost no soft passage unsnorted. Not 
            all listeners may notice, and others may notice but not care - perhaps 
            being inclined to stertor themselves. Yet some at least are sure to 
            find all the catarrhal melodrama an unattractive distraction from 
            the music. The Oslo Quartet are in some regards worse: CPO's miking 
            is more central, which has the advantage of rendering the first violin 
            less noisy, yet the listener pays by now being able to hear all four 
            musicians whenever they start hyperventilating. The (cellist's?) panting 
            at the start of the second movement of the Fifth Quartet, and the 
            slurping noise at the end of the Sixth, are ludicrously affected. 
            The fact that many engineers do manage to record quartets without 
            picking up every inhalation indicates that others, like those of BIS 
            and CPO, are misplacing microphones. The good news is that on both 
            CDs there are long stretches where such respiratory shenanigans are 
            all but inaudible - generally all the louder, vigorous sections.  
             
            If CPO do undertake a second volume to give BIS a run for their money, 
            their producer would do well to discontinue the artificial reverb 
            at works' ends, a practice that, like extravagant breathing, has no 
            place in recordings of serious music. In the meantime, the Stenhammar 
            Quartet, despite their own on-record sniffing, are cruising to the 
            cycle to have of this underrated composer's anachronistic but actually 
            rather profound string quartets.    
             
            Byzantion  
            Contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk 
             
               
            Previous review: Jonathan 
            Woolf  
             
           
         
       
        
 
   
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